Window blind

Decent Essays
Improved Essays
Superior Essays
Great Essays
Brilliant Essays
    Page 3 of 50 - About 500 Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Patricia Era Bath “There comes a time when the world gets quiet and the only sound left is your heart. So you’d better learn the sound of it. Otherwise you’ll never know what it’s saying.” - Sarah Dessen. To make a change, one must learn the sound of their heart. Patricia Era Bath studied ophthalmology in Massachusetts at Harvard College in 1981 after she learned that African Americans have more eye problems than White People. Not many years afterward, she created the Laserphaco Probe. She…

    • 379 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    others. The authenticity of these two stories show you the dangers of ignorance and how you should live life the first time around. In Cathedral, there are two main characters. There is the husband, and a blind man named Robert. Raymond Carver details two polarizing characters: the blind man at first is just a visitor who the wife is really close to and therefor curious as to why he’s there, while the husband is a helpless, carless, lazy man that doesn’t seem too deep into his relationship.…

    • 933 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Throughout this story we are made to feel like the narrator is just a rude and judgmental kind of guy. At each twist and turn in the story he is always there to add a harsh comment, usually towards his wife’s blind friend. One specific time can be noticed during a conversation with his wife about the blind man’s late wife. “Was his wife a Negro?”(Carver, ), he asks. Not much compassion is expected from him as we make our way further into the story. While simply watching a cathedral on TV…

    • 385 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    initial contact with the blind man begins passively: her job to work for the man is simply a job, nothing more. The narrator grows a rapid jealousy and resentment, following the event where his wife allowed the blind man to touch her face, although his initial reaction to reading the poem about the event is blank and unmoving, and he states that he did not think much of the poem, while describing the event, he narrated in detail exactly which parts of her face that the blind man touched, even…

    • 908 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In the essay, Blindness, Jorge Luis Borges describes the many strengths and weakness that originate being a blind man to an audience who does not know what it feels like to actually be blind. He conveys this idea throughout his essay through the use of different rhetorical elements such as ethos and pathos. Borges uses ethos to show readers that he has experienced what it is like to be blind, and pathos unintentionally to have the reader feel certain emotions such as empathy. As he describes…

    • 778 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Carver's short story "Cathedral" was not very accepting of his wife contacting the blind man named Robert with the help of tapes. When he came to visit the couple, the narrator, known as "Bub," was shocked to find that the stereotypes of blind men, which he learned by watching movies, were all false. Carver made Bub to be blind, not physically, but to what communication can lead to. At the beginning, Bub was blind to the world, as he rarely made any communication with anyone, including his…

    • 699 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    predetermined judgements based solely upon jealousy. Robert, a blind man, causes the narrator to shift from judgemental and ignorant to accepting and aware through getting him to see through his eyes. From the moment the narrator hears of Robert’s impending visit, he begins making ignorant judgements about him. Even the first sentence of the story shows the power the narrator seems to need over him. Without naming him, he introduces Robert as, “this blind man” waiting secondly to state that…

    • 1037 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    and unexpected way so by the end of the tale, all characters will experience a dramatic change. When Narrator, at the beginning of the story when he learns that Robert is coming to visit, he gets jealous and angry. Even though he isn’t literally blind, he shows a lack of insight and self-awareness, in many ways, that make him blinder than Robert. He can see perfectly fine with his eyes, but he has trouble understanding people’s thoughts and feelings lie underneath the surface. He then…

    • 302 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    discuss “Cathedral” by Raymond carver for my first essay and how the blind man, Robert, inspires the narrator, the husband of Robert’s friend, to really see the world despite being blind. "Cathedral" is narrated by a man whose wife has an old friend who is coming to visit from Seattle. The friend is blind and his wife has just passed away. The narrator identifies Robert's blindness as his defining characteristic. Though Robert is blind, he can perceive the world in ways the narrator cannot…

    • 827 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    'So I Ain T No Good Girl'

    • 277 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Who am I without him? In the story so “so I ain’t no good girl” the author stated that she isn’t a good girl .The girl is in love with a guy named Raheem. She was waiting for him at the bus stop one day, and Raheem told her to go to school herself, but when she left Raheem had went with that girl that was looking at Raheem last time .Flake uses the story “So I Ain’t No Good Girl” to reveal how the main character in the story feels about her man (Raheem). Flake starts…

    • 277 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 50